
Nathan Unveils His Love After Divorce
Chapter 2
The hospital corridor seemed endless as I raced through Virginia Mason Medical Center, my heart pounding against my ribs. The call from my mother had been brief, terrifying: 'Your father's had a heart attack. They're taking him in now.'
I found Mom in the cardiac wing waiting room, her face ashen and hands trembling as she clutched her purse. When she saw me, something in her crumpled.
"They're working on him," she whispered as I wrapped my arms around her. "It happened so fast, Claire. One minute we were having breakfast, the next..." Her voice broke.
Ryan arrived twenty minutes later, having dropped Emma at school. He looked appropriately somber as he embraced my mother, promised to stay as long as we needed. For a moment, I felt a flicker of gratitude—maybe this crisis would remind him what family truly meant.
"I'll handle everything," he assured me, squeezing my hand. "You just focus on your dad."
The doctor finally emerged after what felt like hours, her face serious but not grim. "He's stabilized," she told us. "The next twenty-four hours will be critical. One family member can sit with him."
Mom looked at me, suddenly uncertain. At sixty-eight, the stress was visibly taking its toll.
"You should rest, Mom," I said gently. "Ryan and I will take shifts with Dad. You can come back after you've had some sleep."
She nodded reluctantly, and I watched as Ryan helped her gather her things, promising to call with any changes. It was the most attentive I'd seen him in months.
"I'll take first watch," Ryan offered after Mom left. "You look exhausted."
I hesitated, then nodded. "Call me immediately if anything changes."
"Of course," he said, his hand on my shoulder. "Go get some coffee at least. I've got this."
I wandered down to the cafeteria, forcing myself to eat a sandwich I couldn't taste. When I returned an hour later, I paused outside my father's room, steeling myself to see him connected to the machines keeping him alive.
But when I pushed the door open, the chair beside my father's bed was empty.
No Ryan.
My father lay alone, pale and vulnerable among the beeping monitors. For a moment, I thought Ryan might have stepped out to use the restroom, but his jacket was gone from the back of the chair.
I pulled out my phone and saw a text from him, sent thirty minutes ago: *Amanda's having a breakdown about the divorce papers. Need to go to her. Back soon.*
The room seemed to tilt sideways. My father had nearly died this morning, and Ryan had abandoned his bedside—his promise to me—because Amanda was having a "breakdown" about paperwork.
I sank into the chair beside my father, taking his limp hand in mine. His skin felt papery, fragile. The steady beep of the heart monitor was both reassuring and terrifying. What if something had happened while he was alone?
When my mother returned three hours later, looking marginally more rested, her eyes darted around the room.
"Where's Ryan?" she asked.
I couldn't bring myself to explain. "He had to step out," I said weakly.
But Mom had always been too perceptive. She studied my face, then glanced at my phone on the side table, its screen dark after hours of silence.
"Amanda?" she asked simply.
I nodded, feeling tears burn behind my eyes.
"Oh, Claire," she sighed, her voice more disappointed than surprised.
When Ryan finally appeared in the doorway nearly five hours after he'd left, I was standing in the hallway, having stepped out to call Emma's babysitter. He approached with the practiced look of concern I'd grown to recognize—the one that masked complete absence of remorse.
"How is he?" Ryan asked, as if he hadn't abandoned his post.
"You promised to stay with him," I said, my voice low but trembling with anger. "He could have—" I couldn't finish the sentence.
"Amanda was falling apart, Claire. What was I supposed to do?"
"You were supposed to keep your word," I hissed. "My father nearly died this morning."
"But he didn't," Ryan countered, his tone suggesting I was being unreasonable. "And Amanda really needed me. Her lawyer is being a complete shark about the settlement."
I stared at him, suddenly seeing with perfect clarity the man I'd married—not the one I thought he was, but the one he'd become. Or perhaps had always been.
"My father needed you. I needed you," I said quietly.
Ryan's phone buzzed in his pocket. He glanced at it, then back at me, his expression already shifting toward the door.
"I have to take this," he said, already turning away.
What he didn't see was my mother standing in the doorway of my father's room, witnessing everything. Her eyes met mine over Ryan's retreating shoulder, and in that silent exchange, I saw something harden in her expression—a quiet, fierce resolve that somehow mirrored what was crystallizing in my own heart.
As Ryan disappeared down the corridor, answering Amanda's call, my mother stepped forward and took my hand.
"When you're ready to leave him," she said simply, "I'll help you."
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